You question your sanity because your reality was denied. When your experience was called lies, when truth was named delusion, when what you knew was real was told to be falseāyour grip on reality loosened to accommodate both what you knew and what you were told. You learned to doubt your own perception, to question your memory, to mistrust your judgment. Now you cannot trust what you see because you were taught that seeing accurately was dangerous.
Feeling like you are losing your mind comes from the gap between internal and external validation of reality. When you knew something was wrong but were told it was fine, when you felt unsafe but were told you were crazy, when you saw abuse but were told it was loveāyour mind split to survive. Now you experience both realities simultaneously: what you know and what you were told to believe, existing in tension that feels like madness.
Living with questioned sanity means never trusting your own judgment, constantly checking reality against others perceptions, feeling like you are crazy when you are actually perceptive. You become someone who gaslights yourself, who accepts others reality over your own, who loses connection to your knowing.
Reclaiming your mind means trusting your perception again, building evidence that you see clearly, learning to validate your own reality. You practice believing yourself, honoring your experience even when it contradicts others accounts. Over time, your sanity stabilizes around your own truth rather than external denial.
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Content informed by trauma research, polyvagal theory (Stephen Porges), somatic experiencing (Peter Levine), and nervous system regulation studies. For comprehensive citations and further reading, see Unfiltered Wisdom: The Book.